Another year fast approaches.


So another year and another year older, the March of time, and The Ides are fast approaching. I share this year with UK Mothers Day, so getting out for a meal to celebrate may be  bit of a challenge, with children guiltily taking out their mothers for perhaps the only time in the year. I’m quite content to stay in and see England beat Italy at Twickenham to go a step further towards the grand slam.

But I digress, it only seems like five minutes ago I was celebrating entering my seventh decade, and here it is two years later. Oh well, keep it going, at least I’m still the right side of the grass. We’ve lost some really well-loved people recently, none more so than Richard Briers my favourite comic actor, who when he was younger I was told I resembled. Couldn’t see it myself, but RIP Richard. Been out a few times lately, once to my old work stamping ground The Squirrel in Farnborough, where it had reopened after ten days refurbishment and all meals and drinks were free! Result, everyone likes a free lunch and there is such a thing. Spent the weekend with my cousin and his wife in Kent, where Broadstairs was holding its annual blues festival. Interesting concept, 10 venues (pubs!) 45 acts spread around evening, mid day and afternoon sessions with some really class acts, and all free, except for ale of course! No one really well known, with the exception of Paul Jones ex Manfred Mann who was playing harp (harmonica) but he was £20 to see, although he did take part in a jam session in the pavilion on the seafront, but we missed that. The bands we did see were excellent, like Rosco Levee and Robin Bibi. Sometimes the pubs were heaving, like the Barnaby Ridge, others like the Lord Nelson were quieter, but the sounds were always great. I shall be going next year hopefully to see cousin Steve perform.

So the Lib Dems have been caught with their pants down, so to speak. And some catholic higher priest has resigned. Do these people ever think that something they may have done years ago won’t get out to ‘bite them on the bum’ later? The way some people gleefully report these mis-demeanours tells me that they keep it quiet until such time as it suits their purposes. Very, very sad. Just lately many people in high or not-so-high positions of power have been caught out doing things they shouldn’t, it makes me wonder whether they thought about the consequence of their actions, at the time. I doubt it, but then does everyone think about consequences of actions? No, but then most people aren’t in power, senior churchmen, celebrities etc, so their actions don’t affect the rest of us. Trouble is people like that can be role models/set an example; are we supposed to copy them, look up to them, respect them? Well no, not if we respect ourselves. I often wonder if people like that should be vetted more, so they can’t get into power, and affect all our lives. Lib Dems take note with the Huhne trial, not a pretty sight.

So back to reality and today, Fran and I went to the best sewing material shop in the area, and while she chose some cloth, I went next door and had a pint in The William Bray, a pub frequented by members of the McLaren F1 team as can be seen from the photo below, which is where I was sat. Nice pint too.

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Hope we get some sunshine as soon as, see you.

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‘For we’re bound for South Australia’


That’s it then, they’re on their way and a big hole has opened up in our lives. It’s not as if we lived in each others pockets, they lived 75 miles away, but we were there for them and close enough to be able to help physically and as well as pastorally.

Teresa and Kevin are emigrating to Australia for at least two years and we will not see them for months, but they are doing what they want to do and  all success in that venture. It doesn’t even help that many other people we know have their children living abroad, in fact our neighbours next door and next door but one have offspring in the USA and Australia. But it affects everyone differently, and I’m no emotional wreck, but I have shed tears today, more because it’s a right of passage for them; not because I have any fears about their future, which I really hope is  successful.

At Brown's, Islington Green

At Brown’s, Islington Green

When we were first told about this last September, it didn’t seem as if it was real, and still doesn’t, like they are going away on an extended holiday. But the detritus which they left behind, stuff they didn’t want to take, reminds us constantly of their recent presence here. They also left their car for me to sell, anyone want to buy a Ford Ka 1.3 56 plate? The other stuff will go in a car boot sale, or the charity shops, or we’ll keep. Teresa put it very well: It’s only ‘stuff’, the important sentimental stuff is in our loft for when (if?) they return or to  dispatch to their next destination.  At least when it’s all put away it won’t remind us of them. It’s the day after they left, and I’m feeling empty and close to tears all the time, can’t shake it off, but on a more positive note, we will at least go and stay with them later this year.

This all reminds me that time is quite fleeting. When we were similar ages as Teresa and Kev, I volunteered to be posted to Germany when I was in the RAF. I got the posting in 1975, and I’ve got to admit, that my parents feelings at the time were not even considered, they were then about the same ages as we are now, so the parallels are quite marked.  In those days of course there was no internet, mobile phones, Skype or any other such communication paraphernalia that we all nowadays take for granted. To contact our parents to whom we were very close on both sides we had to find an International Telefon (telephone) to be able to say hello for a few minutes; the cost was horrendous.  Not all phone boxes were international, so at peak times, i.e. weekends, the nearest ones were usually queued out.  The parents could only write letters which of course we did as well, but anything urgent to impart could take days.  My parents visited us twice, both times in the car and my in-laws never came over at all. We went back three times, mainly because our first daughter was born there.  So I should be able to understand the rationale of Teresa and Kev’s decision, but it still hurts.  Good luck guys, hoping that all works out for you and that your life out in Melbourne goes as well as you would like it to.

See you very soon.  XXX

 

 

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2013 and all that.


A belated and gratuitous Happy New Year to all, yes I know it’s two weeks in to 2013 but it’s the thought that counts.

Well it’s the usual lack of news at the beginning of the year, so of course ‘non-news’ takes precedence, with the some of the lead stories in all media not being worth column 4 on page 12 of the local paper. Still, they have something to get their teeth into today with the tragic news of the helicopter crash in South London, lets hope there isn’t too much tragedy coming out of it. I’ve flown down the Thames in a Gazelle from RAF Northolt in West London, and it’s an exhilarating ride. My thoughts are with those involved.

It can now be confirmed that my daughter Teresa and husband Kevin are off to Australia early next month for at least two years. He has got a great job in Melbourne so they are renting out their flat, having a two GROEP (Get Rid of Everything Party) and girding their loins to relocate to the other side of the world. It’s amazing how events affect you that you are not directly involved in. We had pretensions of going to Australia on a holiday ‘sometime’, now of course we have the perfect incentive to go out there, which we intend to do later in the year. The GROEP has been advertised widely and has been successful, people have come along and taken what they fancied from the household goods on display. I’m not sure if any money changes hands! I have mixed feelings about our youngest going off down under. She has always been quite independent, but she has lived away from home since she was 18 so I don’t suppose a move like that will faze her too much. The person it will affect more is Fran, my wife, who has said that the day after they leave will be the worse, and she will miss her terribly. We don’t see each other that often, maybe half a dozen times a year, but a weekly phone call is the normal method of keeping in touch. When they are out there Skype will be used a lot more, as well as an App on the phone I’ve bought called ‘WhatsApp’. I have no idea how it works yet, but I’m sure I’ll get instructions from the offspring. I applaud their efforts in getting this whole episode together, and I hope that it all works out for them, as you do. I will miss her very much as well of course, and am not looking forward to them leaving the UK, but the upside is we will see them later. Enough of this before I get all emotional.

It’s January, it’s cold and it’s going to snow or already has in some parts. Why then do some drivers go down the road as if there is no ice or other different conditions? I think some of these people are on a death wish. I offer this simple piece of advice: When the temperature is below zero, your windscreen ices up, right? So is there any reason why the same shouldn’t be happening on the road? Are tarmac surfaces treated so they don’t ice up? Yes but only after the gritting lorries have been through, otherwise the road surface COULD be icy. Have you tried to run on ice? Yes? Then you will know you can’t do it too successfully, and slip all over the place. Some car drivers seem to think they are exempt from the vagaries of ice affecting them and that they probably think they are shrouded in some sort of force field which protects them from skidding on ice. The trouble is when they drive like maniacs on ice, as if there is none, and then have an accident, they affect other people, who generally have been observing the conditions and driving accordingly. I wish they would think on, and if they can’t drive on ice, or are not willing to adjust their driving to take account of the conditions, I have a suggestion to make: Stay at Home and save lives!

The only redeeming factor about January and February is that you know the nights will draw out, so that at the end of January it is still light at 5 pm. Personally I like the different seasons we get in this country and even though winter can be a challenge at times, it is followed by Spring which is a lovely time of the year. The snowdrops start coming through, the daffodils are poking their heads through and some foliage starts to appear on shrubs and trees. I think it’s a magical time of year, when the sleeping fauna and flora start to wake up and get ready for the best part of the year. Now the snows have arrived with a vengeance and it looks all Christmassy!

Ta-ta for now.

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And the moon turns the tide gently….


2012 has come and gone, the world didn’t end so here we are and we have to get on with it. Actually the way I read it the Mayan calendar just came to an end without them saying the world was going to end, just the soothsayers and believers who perpetrated that idea. I agree with Putin, the Russian President who said the world will end in umpty dump million years. But I expect there will be another hidden calender unearthed from Nostradamus or the Bahá’í Faith or someone else who will predict the end of the world again and it will all turn out to be tosh.

The New Years Honours List, well no surprises there then. I wonder if other countries have a similar honours system. There is no equivalent to Sir, which is an ancient honorific title from the knights or baronets, but there is the Papal knight, of which one example was Jimmy Savile! It seemed to be a shoe-in for Bradley Wiggins to get his sirship, especially after winning the Tour de France and Olympic Golds, then capturing the Sports Personality of the Year. Which incidentally is curious to me; the word personality conjours up all sorts of ideas: The visible aspect of one’s character as it impresses others: He has a pleasing personality; a person as an embodiment of a collection of qualities: He is a curious personality; the sum total of the physical, mental, emotional, and social characteristics of an individual; the organized pattern of behavioural characteristics of the individual; the quality of being a person; existence as a self-conscious human being; personal identity. Can all or any of these be applied to someone who is just good at a particular sport, or does they embody other qualities which would give that person a better personality? Discuss. But back to the Honours List, it seems quite fair for the Olympians to be honoured, but if the Olympics didn’t happen this year who are we left with? Quentin Blake well deserved illustrator, a few political donaters as usual, and the odd luvvy. But other than the sports stars it’s a bit thin, which I suppose shows that we worship sports above all else.

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A gratuitous picture of our house with all the Christmas lights on

Christmas was very enjoyable this year. The girls and my nephew Leeward descended on us on Christmas Eve, followed by sister-in-law and partner for a couple of nights, then on Boxing Day another four relatives and partners, so for Christmas lunch it was seven sat down to haunch of venison, and eleven the next day for curry and chilli. Considering that we don’t see each other that often it was a success, no arguments or petty squabbles. We played on the XBox, went for walks, sang a bit of karaoke, and did the usual eating and drinking in between.

Before all that however we went to Pauline’s 60th party (black tie, masks) on the Saturday 22nd:

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Yes I have got my mask on!

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and stayed overnight in Brighton on the 23rd to see The Beat at Concorde2: http://youtu.be/Gxa3ZeQl8YM . So both events were a wind-down to the hectic few days that followed. The party was very nicely done at a golf club in deepest Berkshire, and Pauline, who said she had never had a party because of the proximity of her birthday to Christmas had a lovely time, so did we all:

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Pauline and Fred

Seeing The Beat was a great gig, they played for 1 ½ hours non-stop and gave us very good value with hits such as Mirror in the Bathroom, Hands off She’s Mine and Can’t get used to losing You. Ranking Roger is still there looking as fit as ever, but is now joined by his son and shares the vocals with him. Good to see and recommended.

So now to the New Year and resolutions, which I have never made or kept. The 30th December is the anniversary of me giving up smoking in 1990, one of my better choices. I now cannot see the point of smoking and given my chance again would never have taken it up; so why do young people still do it? The cost is now so prohibitive to be out of reach of most surely? In this day and age is smoking still seen as a sign of maturity and being ‘hard’? I don’t see how it can given the dangers shown at every opportunity. Smoking is a disgusting, evil habit which doesn’t improve anyone’s health. The pressure group Ash still think smoking doesn’t do any harm and in fact puts taxes into the coffers for the government, presumably spent on the NHS to take care of smokers? To return to an earlier comment by me, in that the Olympics helped me lose weight, that is one thing I am going to work on. The weight I lost in July has stayed off so I can do it, and remain at a set level, but I’m not going to reveal it, just yet.

Oh well as they say in all the best cliches, and films: good luck in the New Year and have a good one. Clive

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Christmas time, mistletoe and wine….


What! Christmas time already! What happened to 2012? Only a few minutes ago I was strolling around the Excel in my Games Makes uniform enjoying the sunshine. Now winter has come early, frosts, sleet, rain and more to come; weather we normally get in January and February. So Christmas again, if we get there and the world doesn’t end on 21st December. No, it won’t but it makes a good story and gets believers panicking. This year we are doing Secret Santa which I’ve never experienced before, but it seems a lot cheaper and you don’t buy loads of toot that the recipients don’t really need or want. I like that idea, and I’m not being tight, Christmas to me has always been overblown out of all proportion to its origin. Why oh why do parents still spend hundreds of pounds on big-ticket items for their little darlings? Isn’t that what birthdays are for? In our family my girls got low-key presents for Christmas and major items on their birthdays, which are both luckily in the middle of the year. I like the idea of getting the family together and having a shindig, even though we do this at other times of the year as well. This year has more poignancy since our number two daughter is off overseas for two years with her husband so we may not see them for some time. But back to my original thread, I know that Christmas will essentially never change, wassailing will happen, presents will be bought, crap Christmas records will be issued, charity will be shoved in your face (think of all those starting millions while you are enjoying yourself), debt will increase, so will suicides. Yes, Christmas means lots of things to all manner of people, but not necessarily anything remotely religious. Merry Christmas anyway.

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This is the Christmas jigsaw we bought years ago and kept assembled. I framed it to put it up every year

Interesting article by Stephen Glover in the Daily Mail the other day, in which he suggested that the influx of immigrants into this country in the 2000’s was due to Blair’s government allowing it because it increased their chances of winning elections; twenty Labour seats were dependent on mainly Asian immigrants voting for them. Interesting that he focussed on Asian immigration, when, but I don’t know the figures, there were probably as many coming in from Eastern Europe. Did Labour depend on the Poles and Ukrainians for these seats as well? The jury is probably still out, but with this countries population now at 62 million, it makes you wonder how and where all these extra people came from, and that is just the legal immigrants. How many were illegal I wonder? You could probably add another million on top of that. Still it’s an interesting hypothesis, and I’m not surprised if Blair made it his aim to keep Labour in power in this manner, even though it eventually failed, but that’s more due to Brown taking over than immigrants falling out of favour with the party. Now that UKIP is catching up, the traditional fight between the two big guns may be split by them, so they may not get it all their own way next time; could be interesting in 2015.

Ultimately the sad story of the nurse who committed suicide is a sign of the times; where some people might find pranks like that good for cheap laughs, there are those amongst us who have much higher standards and are willing to pay the ultimate price rather than bear the guilt that they may have upset someone. The perpetrators of the prank call would never in a million years expected or wanted the final outcome, so there must a measure of sympathy for them as well. Will this mean the end of this sort of prank? As we used to say in the military on the radio network: Wait – out.

I’m having another tooth out today, the third is as many years. I have looked after my teeth, flossed like mad, brushed twice a day etc, but still they fall apart. I wouldn’t mind so much but the one it bites down on was capped at great expense 6 months ago, and after today it will have nothing to react against. An insert to replace the removed tooth could cost £2000, so I will see if I can cope without it for a while before I make a decision on whether to get a new car or new tooth. Ce la Vie

Well if we are spared as my old chief used to say, I’ll see you in 2013, as usual we’ve got nothing planned for this New Year’s eve, may stay in again and watch Jools Holland. Good night and good luck.

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A budding author?


As many of you might know, I have aspirations to be an author. I am already in a writers club, and started to write the piece below a couple of weeks ago.  For those who have read about the exploits of a well-known detective who lives in Edinburgh, you might recognise the genre, but any co-incidence between this and any other fiction is purely accidental.  Anyway as usual  I’d love to hear your comments via the link below. This is 2700 words so far, the average novel needs 10-12 times that so I’ve got my work cut out.  (Warning: contains some swear words):

A Better Life

By Clive Handy © 2012

A Covus story

1.

Covus picked up the glass and drained it in a resigned manner.

‘Right let’s hit it’ he said to his partner Sheila Christie, and leapt to his feet.

They went outside to Covus’ battered Renault and drove off to have a look at the crime scene.  A body had been discovered in undergrowth just off the Wandsworth High Street Knoll Road and Covus had taken upon himself to find out about it, since it was near to his old stamping ground. On the way his 2 way radio crackled into life with the well-rounded tones of his boss, DCI Roy Stubbs who was always ‘on the case’ of DI Jim Covus though he didn’t for the life of him know why. DI Covus had been a detective for over 20 years and relied more on old fashioned ‘gut instinct’ than modern technology even eschewing mobile phones and social networking. Perhaps that is why this ‘young upstart’ DCI had a downer on Covus being much younger and a higher rank than him.

‘Where the hell are you Covus?’ barked the radio.

‘Roger HQ, on my way to Wandsworth over’ riposted Covus who sarcastically replied in that manner knowing full well it was Stubbs at the other end.

‘For Chrissakes it’s DCI Stubbs here and I want to know who authorised this’, you could almost see the spittle flying out as he spoke.

‘Err, my old stamping ground boss thought I might lend a hand’ Covus tried to sound as contrite as possible.

‘I’ve already sent Smithers, he’s on the scene.’

This referred to Fred Smithers who was the ‘blue eye boy’ of the station. Whereas Covus was slightly scruffy and looked in need of a shave, Smithers was immaculately turned out, which Stubbs considered made him a better detective. Covus of course disagreed and knew that his clear-up rate had nothing to do with his dress code, and told Stubbs this, often.

‘Aah but he doesn’t know that particular manor gov whereas I was brung up there,’ returned Covus accentuating the ‘brung up’ to show he was indeed of cockney persuasion, whereas Smithers was from somewhere ‘up north’, but anywhere north of Tottenham was a foreign country to Covus, and gave him a nosebleed. By this time, the ancient Renault was turning off Wandsworth High Street and up to where several police vans and cars were gathered with copious quantities of blue and white ‘police line- do not cross’ tape stretched around the scene of the crime bordering a square white tent which had been placed on a piece of land once occupied by a building, but was now awaiting re-development. The undergrowth was 3 feet high and the body would have been hidden quite well.
‘I want you to return to base NOW!’ The spittle quotient increased from the radio.
Covus responded by switching off the radio stopping the car and getting out to be met by Fred Smithers.
‘What the fuck are you doing here?’ demanded Smithers, ‘DCI Stubbs sent me a text saying he tried to stop you.’

‘Oh I don’t believe in that new-fangled stuff,’ replied Covus, ‘I’m here to solve a crime, what’s your brief, best dressed detective or most annoying shit?’

‘You arrogant bastard Covus, you shouldn’t be here, and I’m going to make sure you don’t interfere.’ Smithers stood foursquare in front of Covus.

‘Go fuck yourself, this is my manor and I’ll be the best judge of what’s what.’ Covus returned.
Smithers phone then be-beeped on the receipt of a text message. He looked at the message and frowned, deeply.

‘Bollocks!’ said Smithers as he held the screen up for Covus to see. It said simply ‘Covus has complete control. Smithers return to base.’

Covus smiled to himself, he knew how that had happened…..

2.

Jenny Wilshire looked like she was one of those girls who people, especially boys, would immediately think as someone they would get to like to know better. She was tall, 5’ 8’, slim and pretty with long blond hair, but there any resemblance to an angel stopped as she definitely did not fit into the mould of ‘nice to look at, nice to know’.  She had an arrest list that stretched back quite a few years and at 24 would be considered a fairly hardened criminal even though most of the offences were minor in the extreme, ranging from petty shoplifting to aggravated assault and receiving.  There was no earthly reason why she would have turned out like that; she came from a family where both parents were still with each other, lived in their own house and both worked. There is no guarantee that these conditions automatically promote the most virtuous of people, but it’s a better bet than the feckless, single mother having multiple births with different fathers, not working and letting their children do more or less do want they want.

Jenny was bought up in a fairly strict household and was taken to church every Sunday by her God fearing father so this may have subjugated against her becoming someone similar. As soon as she had the chance, she was off into the working world, getting a job in the local electronic component factory, where she was surprising deft and accurate in her work, assembling specialist circuit boards. This was despite the 6 Grade 1 GCSEs and 2 A* A levels she attained at school without so much as breaking sweat. Of course her parents and in particular her father wanted her to go to University, but Jenny was having none of that, she wanted to get out into the wide world and enjoy life. And enjoy she did, spending all her wages on going out and getting mainly drunk with a little dabble in drugs on the side. If her father found out about this part of her life he would have grounded her and then thrown her out, so she kept it quiet, which is perhaps the start of her downfall.

Covus was completely in his stride now that Smithers had gone, tail between his legs back to demand from Stubbs the explanation of what was going on. Covus knew of course why he had been preferred over his smarter colleague, and he was glad that he had the opportunity to investigate the death of the person inside the white tent. Jenny Wilshire’s father Phil was a good friend of Covus and through his position as a parish councillor had contacted DCI Stubbs superior officer and especially asked that Covus be put in charge of the investigation into his daughter’s death, without giving the reason.  Stubbs had been told this after Covus had turned off his radio hence the late call for Smithers to stand down.  Covus lit a cigarette, not the easiest vice to give up, which is was trying to; as he was on maybe 20-30 a day.  Trouble is he liked to smoke and since he didn’t have any one else to please,  he didn’t really want to give up. Sheila Christie appeared beside him, a striking brunette of about 5’ 9’ with short Mia Farrow style hair and a very slim body.  Covus assumed she worked out at the local gym, unlike him for which any form of exertion was anathema.

‘What’s the griff?’ he asked.

‘Tall, slim girl, 5’ 9’ – 5’ 10’, several stab wounds in the chest, death about 8 hours ago according to the doc.’ Christie answered in a slight midland accent.

‘Weapon?’ said Covus hoping against hope.

‘Still looking, doesn’t look good’. Christie confirmed Covus fears.

Covus finished his ciggie and walked towards the evidence tent, pulling back the door having been booked in by the wooden top on guard. Bright halogen lights were burning away illuminating the scene, driven from a generator humming in the background, its petrol engine quite muted.  In the centre of the tent a plastic sheet covered the obvious outline of a body. Christie motioned to pull back the sheet but Covus shook his head, seeming to falter slightly.  Although he knew the father from way back, he had never met the daughter and didn’t know how he was going to react, despite having seen many dead bodies in his time.  This one was slightly different in that he was seeing the girl before any of the family, who would have to do the official identity, at the mortuary.  Covus indicated the sheet to be removed and Sheila obliged.  The girl was lying on her back with several bloody circles dotted around her chest.  She was wearing a short skirt, no tights, little flat shoes and a flimsy cotton top.  She was very pretty and already motives for her stabbing were flooding into Covus’ mind.  He knelt down next to the body and looked at her left hand, the fingers of which each had several cheap rings on them, none precious and a cheap watch.  On the other wrist were several of the bands young girls like to wear, including bizarrely one for ‘Help the Heroes’, the charity which helped soldiers returning from overseas who needed help outside the normal MoD assistance.  Bizarre because this was not a military area and her family had nothing to do with the army, so that interested him.  Rigour mortis had set in and her arm was stiff when lifted. Covus wanted to have a closer look at her hand and had already donned plastic gloves for the purpose.  There was definitely something under the nails, which were false, of course, but did look nicely done.  There was some scratching on the back of her left hand and left side of her face. He would let forensics look closely at those clues; that is if the lab was open. Recent cutbacks had put paid to 24 hour forensics cover with the uncivil servants putting paid to full coverage. There was also the risk that the private firms now starting to take over the forensic duties would price any but the most wealthy forces to be unable to afford their services.

‘Right I’m off back to the factory to do some digging,’ Covus motioned to Christie to follow him.

‘Looks a bit pat’, he commented to her as they walked towards the Renault.

‘What do you mean gov?’

‘There isn’t any frenzy, no clothes ripped off, no disturbance of the ground, as if she was stabbed somewhere else possibly while she was asleep and then put here afterwards. See if you get the locals to have a scout around for any disturbance, start knocking on doors.’

Covus got to his car, and was approached by a middle aged man, wearing dirty, scruffy, ripped clothes, old dirty trainers and was in need of a good wash, shave and a haircut.  He was also a bit ‘high’.

‘Do you want some info abaat this?’ he asked Covus.

‘How do you know to ask me?’

‘I saw you coming out o’ that tent, I’ve seen CSI you know, I know you are a senior copper.’

‘OK, bearing that in mind, what do you know?’

‘Err, I could do wiv ….’

‘Oh that, right.’ Covus took his wallet out of his back pocket, fished out a fiver and handed it to him.

‘Is that all?’ For someone in his position he seemed to know how much information was worth.

‘It’ll do for starters, if it’s worth any more, you may get more. What do you know?’

‘Car pulled up in the middle of the night, I was hunkering down in that shed in that, in that garden just over there’, he said, indicating a run-down semi-detached house that was obviously unoccupied on the opposite corner,

‘trying to bed dan for the night. The motor stopped and I heard whispered voices and doors slamming.  When I looked over I could see two bodies carrying another one out of, out of the car.’   He had a propensity for repeating phrases, maybe it was a stutter.

‘What did they do?’

‘They went further into this plot, I know the building that was here was demolished sometime ago, because I used it, used it sometimes when the night watchman didn’t see me.’

‘Yeah OK, besides the history lesson, what happened after that?’

‘Well the next thing I saw was the figures, get back into the car and drive, drive orf.’

‘Make, model, colour, reg?’ intoned Covus in the age old fashion.

‘Well, it were a saloon, dark colour and no I couldn’t see the reg, the number plate light was aht.’

‘Which direction did it go off in?’

‘That way.’ He indicated towards the Wandsworth High Street.

‘And you never thought to contact anyone earlier because….’

‘Leave it aht guvnor it was silly o’clock and I was bloody cold and ‘ungry.’  As if that were explanation enough.

‘OK, what’s your name and of course you must be no fixed address?’

‘Brian Wilson, no not, no not the Beach Boys one.’

‘Where can I get hold of you?’

‘Most of the day, day I’m in the church mission hall, in Haldon Road’

‘Right don’t go far from there, I’ll want to speak to you later’

Covus got in, so did Christie and they drove off. Wandsworth wasn’t too bad for traffic at this time of the day and he got to the ‘factory’, i.e. the police station in Wandsworth High Street in under 5 minutes. As usual there was no parking so he had to park in the museum adjacent to the station. Luckily he had a ‘Police – on call’ notice he kept in the car, which he put in the windscreen. Covus ‘swiped in’ with his entrance card and entered the staff entrance of the station, nodding to a couple of colleagues as he walked in.  Tony Lewis a DC in his office, came towards him,

‘Stubbs wants to see you’

Covus walked into the CID office, Stubbs’ was a closed windowed cage inside the main office. He walked up to the door, didn’t knock and strode in.

‘Don’t you believe in knocking?’

‘I could see there was no one in there with you, what’s the diff?’

‘Courtesy.’ Stubbs didn’t like Covus much but he grudgingly admitted he was a fairly good copper, even though his methods weren’t exactly Hendon. Stubbs was a high flying university entrant, who had made very good progress to become a DCI at the age of 33.  This was the modern approach to senior officers, get them straight from university and fast track them through. Unfortunately this meant that some of them didn’t gain enough experience along the way, and thought they could succeed on intellect alone. This was fine but didn’t give the broad experience that a really good detective needed. Covus was of course, old school, which meant he didn’t have a string of formal qualifications to his name having joined up as a PC, did his probation, and worked on the beat for five years before turning in a few shifts as a seconded DC in mufti, civilian clothes, and made a good impression. Later he formally applied to become a DC, was accepted, did his training and went on to promotion to sergeant and then inspector; the classic route so well-established for many years. Stubbs on the other hand, came out of Brunel University, Uxbridge with a first class honours degree in psychology having already joined the Met to get his bursary through university. The Met did this to recruit potential fast track officers to fund their university education in return for a commitment to a term in the Met. Stubbs did his probation, even that was being dispensed with nowadays, did his two years minimum as a PC, then was automatically chosen for the detective course at Hendon.  The rest was history.  Sergeant at 27, DI at 30 and now recently promoted to DCI, not bad going and quite well paid at nearly £55,000. But there were drawbacks, like his lack of experience and lack of what could be called ‘people dealing’, i.e. being too insular and wrapped up in his own little world and not looking out to see what was going on. ……. to be continued.

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Snippets


Illnesses! I started to feel a little unwell about 10 days ago, my hip was giving me a lot of pain, so I went the quack who sent me to get an X-Ray. The results show slight wear so no action required, but in the mean time I’ve developed shingles, not recommended! Painful isn’t in it. Hey ho all part of life and getting older I guess. When you look back at say 10 or 20 years it all seems to have gone too quickly, looking forward to the same amount of time I’ll be ancient, assuming I get there of course! Where has 2012 gone? A few months ago I was striding around the Excel at the Olympics, that seems like so long ago.

So the elections are over for the Police and Crime Commissioners (PCC) for England and Wales (but not London) to represent 41 counties. As expected the turn-out was very low, less than 10% is some areas, with a high so far declared of 15%. The argument is though, that each Commissioner is representing a county with an electorate of millions in some cases, so 10% 0f 6 million is still 600,000 people voting for a candidate, in those terms it beats the election of MPs quite easily. But is it a mandate for the PCCs to trumpet their term in office as a turning point in the administration of law and order in this country? I doubt it, most of the candidates were politically motivated, and aligned so presumably had the backing of the main political parties. Which begs the question: why bring politics into policing? Because politics interferes with every other area of life, that’s why. Why should the police service be any different? The main problem as I see is that each political party has their own take on the policy of policing the police (heavy handed sentence!). The Labour guy will disagree with the Conservative guy and the Lib Dem will sit quietly in the corner mumbling to him/herself. Each politico will have different ideas on law and order, so that in the Conservatives’ case, they would want to rescind the European law on human rights, whereas Labour would not. And so on – or not.

The weather is now getting worse again, and bodes for quite a nasty winter again this year. Last year’s snow was bad enough, then we had the hosepipe ban, the deluge, a wet summer, and now the damp autumn; I suppose it ‘s what we were always used to in the past, but with more media commentary and better technology it’s more noticeable now. Still the weather is always cause for discussion in this country, I wonder if it discussed as much elsewhere? Discuss.

I’ve been watching a programme about Hitler on BBC2 and his effect on the German people in the 1930’s. Fascinating stuff, he apparently didn’t take advice on anything from anybody and used to go to his bedroom in the Reich Chancellery in Berlin, and emerge at nearly midday having thought long and hard about decisions which were in the main accepted by his generals. There were a few who dissented, and one of these was Brech, who was instrumental in the attempt on Hitler’s life in 1944. But in the first years of the war he was held in the highest esteem by the German people; after they invaded Belgium and France in mid 1940, his popularity went right down and he was becoming a hate figure in some circles. But the most fascinating part was his hold over the population of Germany in the 30’s and the slavish way they voted for him and followed his speeches with rapture, which you have to admit were very powerful and well received. This was one man’s quest, and he had little or no backing. Was the population of Germany in 1933 (66 million) completely take in by this man? By the end of the war he was of course completely mad, and made the ultimate sacrifice. One wonders if the same kind of man could be as successful in this age? I’ll be watching the final part next Monday to find out more.

See you soon, please as usual any comments most welcome.

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25 years


November 11th 1987 was a defining day for me, it was the day my 2nd parent passed away, so Sunday 11th November will have been 25 years since my dad died in his sleep.

The TV in his bedroom was on, the toilet had been flushed, so he had got up in the middle of the night. My wife went to take him a cup of tea (he lived in a granny annexe; part of our house), left it because she thought he was asleep, got the kids ready for school and went off to work. I had left for my job by train to London hours before. My wife got back mid morning and found that my dad hadn’t moved and wasn’t breathing. The first I knew was a phone call at work from my wife, I left in a hurry and a daze to catch the train home. She had arranged for a friend and neighbour to pick me up from the station, even though my car was there already. I got home, a police car was in the drive and one of those ‘private’ ambulances in the road. Dad was still in his bed, looking peaceful but grey, and very dead. I couldn’t cry, like I couldn’t when my mum died two years earlier. It’s not that I can’t express emotion or that it’s a ‘man’ thing not shedding tears; I just couldn’t. 25 years down the line I now realise that I had no emotion at that time, I was in my mid 30s and an orphan. It’s now as if I was a different person then, yes I had a wife and two young children to cope with and the normal hustle and bustle of life had to carry on, but looking back I wish I could have shed a tear. It’s not that I didn’t love my parents, I did, but even at that age I wasn’t ready emotionally to cope with the loss. I see people of my age now and I sometimes feel pangs of jealousy that their parents are still around in their 80s and 90s. But we’ve all got to go sometime and I suppose it’s a reaction against confronting my mortality. In my 40s I had periods when I couldn’t sleep I was so worried about the end of life, now it’s not so bad as it’s inevitable. My dad was a war hero, mentioned in dispatches; he spent four years in Burma and India, but I know little about what he did out there. He wouldn’t talk about it and I, to my bitter regret, didn’t ask. My dad was 65, just four years more than I am now, so what is my future?

So I will be ‘on parade’ on Remembrance Sunday, not because my dad was a victim of the war but because he was an old soldier and so was I. I want to commemorate all those that have gone before, who, and I hate the expression, gave their lives for their country. They didn’t. What these mostly men and some women did was to die as a result of actions outside their control and as a consequence of that action. Not one of them would have voluntarily given their lives except in a very few cases of selflessness, and their contribution to our freedom cannot be measured. Please support our troops, think of those who have died in the service of the country, pray that there will be mo more wars and stand silent for two minutes at 11 o’clock.

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The name’s Bond, Brooke Bond


After all the hype about it (and damn good marketing – but does it need it?), we went to see Skyfall at the new local cinema, Cineworld.  Every anticipation was exceeded, despite the critics who found it ‘boring’ after the first ten minutes, but it wasn’t.  Craig is a very good Bond, probably the best one since Connery, but I’ve got the feeling he may be coming to the end of his association with the franchise, maybe one or two more pictures?  We’ll have to wait and see.

I wrote to my local MP about the need for different punishment for those who commit the most heinous of crimes, in particular the two police women that were shot dead in September.  Whoever is responsible, I argued, should be given the ultimate penalty, the death sentence.  But, and this is a big but, the decision should not be left to a judge putting on the black cap; it should go to the highest court in the land, The Supreme Court, for their verdict. In most cases I would think, they would baulk at sending a murderer to their deaths, but there is always the final sanction which could be implemented.  The stopper in all this of course is Europe. The UK parliament abolished the death penalty in 1965, reaffirmed it in 1998, then in 1999 Protocol 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights was signed by the UK, effectively abolishing the death penalty in all signatory countries, such that no person  can be condemned to such a penalty.  The only way this can be rescinded is if the Convention is denounced.  Given our relation with Europe and the convention of Human Rights discussions that take place practically daily, would this ever happen?  The Euro-sceptics would have us believe that they can take us out of Europe’s obsession with Human Rights, but those who support European edicts argue that integration of Europe into one state is the best way to go.  Well, I don’t think Europe has done much for us, and judging by the amount of money we have to donate every day for little return, the bureaucrats who sit fat, dumb and happy in Brussels are quite happy for this to carry on.  In addition what do France and Germany do about European directives? They stick two fingers up (except of course the capital punishment issue) and say we ain’t doing that, but those two countries were the main instigators of the European Union. It’s only countries like Britain that accede to every directive and edict that comes out of the bureaucratic mess that is Brussels, and pay the fines or money demanded so that unelected fat cats can draw their expenses and salaries for doing apparently very little.  I blame Ted Heath for getting us into this mess, I mean why would a dance orchestra leader want us to go into Europe?  It makes about as much sense as the political Ted Heath wanting us to.

The autumn has is well and truly into its stride, the trees have turned wonderful shades and the leaves are falling thick and fast. Bonfire night is over, and it’s only 6 weeks to Christmas, deep joy but in contrast concerts are there to be seen. We saw Fleetwood Bac the other week and they were excellent, musically and visually, although the guy playing Lindsey Buckingham had a dodgy wig, could play a bit though. The girl playing Stevie Nicks had an excellent voice as the did the Christine McVie keyboard player who absolutely nailed ‘For You’ recently a hit by the girl singer whose name escapes me.  They did over two hours and covered just about all the phases of the original band, including an excellent rendition of ‘Oh Well’, the Peter Green vehicle; but I would have liked to have heard more from the early days, despite the fact that they were playing as the Fleetwood Mac from the 70’s/80’s.  Overall a superb night out and well worth going to see if they are ever in your area.  We’re off to the Royal Tournament which has been worthily resurrected and nearer Christmas we are seeing The Beat, should bring back memories of the days I was in a band in the 80’s.  As usual I’ll report on these events.

Again, I hope you enjoy my ramblings and if they spark controversy, I would be pleased to hear from you using the ‘Comment’ link below.  See you soon.

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A Rolling Stone gathers no moss (but plenty of dosh)


Only seems like yesterday…. The Rolling Stones have celebrated 50 years in show business. Well, that’s a remarkable achievement given the ages of the main protagonists.  And to add to those milestones, they decided to release a new single: Doom and Gloom.  Whether this is a comment on the current situation  in the UK, or because they have decided to go on tour because they desperately needed more money, probably the latter in Mick Jagger’s case, not so sure about the others; I don’t know.  Still, they did at least advertise a gig in Paris this week for £12 on Twitter, which of course went viral very quickly, with tickets reportedly changing hands for £12,000!  Ridiculous of course, I mean who in their right mind would want to pay £12 to see the oldest rockers ever, not me; it would be like seeing myself on stage. Thanks to Publius Syrus the poet who first coined the proverb of the title (but not the bracketed bit).

The old chestnut is going around at the moment about retirement and what is the right age to finish work.  Then there is that Lord someone who says pensioners should “earn” their, I presume he means, state pension, by helping out in the community older pensioners who may need assistance.  What planet is this guy from?  Most who have worked have contributed long and hard over their working years towards the welfare state, and the idea of helping older pensioners to justify drawing their pension is insulting and ridiculous to the extreme. There are hundreds of thousands of lazy, work-shy individuals who have never done a stroke in their lives whilst living on state handouts who should be employed first. Why doesn’t this Lord Blah say that anyone on job seekers allowance or whatever it’s called nowadays earn it by doing community work instead of sitting around drinking Special Brew while watching their 50 inch plasmas? Because in the main they are younger/fitter they would be better equipped to lift things and people, not us old cronies with our bad backs and dodgy knees. I sometimes wonder whether some of these pronouncements come from people who have no idea….about anything. This guy retired from the  civil service (probably with a fat pension) at aged 54, I bet he doesn’t volunteer to go out and help older people to keep HIS pension.

The energy companies are again in the firing line about energy prices. The media again kick them in the teeth and go on about it (like the Savile thing, but I’m not going there), I wonder if there isn’t much hard news about at the moment?  There is of course a simple solution to reduce everyone’s energy bill.  Reduce or get rid of the 5% VAT imposed on everyone’s bill.  That won’t happen of course because the government would lose a lot of income from that stream.  Anyway whose idea was it to charge VAT on something which is as essential as food (which isn’t taxed) or books (again which aren’t – eh you kidding!). Yes that’s right folks, the government (the last one admittedly) wants to charge VAT for the simple ‘pleasure’ of heating and lighting your home, but not on the latest blockbuster novel that you buy from WH Smith, what the hell is happening?  The same government that imposed VAT on air travel for some reason. There must be a committee of mandarins who think up new ways to sting us for anything we have part with money for, and so they can earn more to spend on their pensions and pet projects. Good news though! The economy went up by 1%, so that’s all right then, we’ll start spending on new roads and airports.  Oh I don’t know, maybe I’m just rambling about the news media who never let the truth get in the way of a good story.  The Savile story seems to drag on and on, like the George Osborne train ticket story, or are they stories worthy of august publications? Doubt it, the news hounds seem to want these things to last forever, perhaps so they can be lazy about finding new stories to write about.

I’m off to see a band called ‘Fleetwood Bac’, obviously a play on words for the original band: John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers, who first employed original Fleetwood Mac members Mick Fleetwood and John McVie, and who have apparently endorsed this particular cover band.  We’ll see, I’ll do a review of them and post it on this blog.

Be lucky and if you can’t be lucky, make your own.

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